Preserve the precious memories of your loved ones
By scanning a QR code on the gravestone, you can access your personal memorio memorial page.
This offers you a new way of saying goodbye and remembering the deceased.
Here you can preserve images, videos and other personal content,
that go beyond the classic format of a gravestone.
This creates a personalised space for remembering beautiful shared moments
and to honour the memory of the deceased.
The discreet QR code gravestone blends in harmoniously and creates access to the
memory in silent remembrance.
The right plaque for every gravestone - you can choose between various QR code motifs.
The memory of the deceased takes centre stage.
Therefore, both the badge with QR code for the gravestone and the digital memorial page are 100% ad-free, even without self-advertising.
The interactive input template enables you to create a professional memorial page without any specific prior knowledge.
Create a free memorial page for € 0 risk-free
Unlimited images and videos can be integrated
For urn graves, communal graves or single graves
Extensive personal support
Edith Miller
* 29.3.1948 † 7.12.2023
London - Berlin
You are with us in
every moment.
Biography
Edith Miller was born in London on 29 March 1948.
Her parents were Mary and Edward Miller.
Her sister was born two years before her.
Even before she started school, her parents moved to Berlin with her,
where she first attended school and then went to university.
In 1974 she began her studies at the University of Berlin in chemistry.
1982 Marriage with her german husband Lutz.
Early retirement from February 2011.
† 7. December 2023 Berlin.
Images
Edith ~7 years old
Memories
At the family home
in London
Media
J. S. Bach - Air
E. Elgar - Pomp and
circumstance
Book of condolences
by Laura Wilson
on 30. December 2023
by Arthur
on 3. January 2024
A book of condolences allows family and friends to share memories
Location of the grave can be integrated
Optional password security
100% advertising free
Discover the possibilities of the memorio memorial page free of charge and without obligation.
No advertising
High-quality laser engraving
External links
Location
The aluminium badge is made of robust, anodised aluminium, a durable material,
ideal for engraving a QR code for the gravestone precisely and permanently.
The QR code is engraved in great detail using laser engraving, whether as a heart for a grave or a cross as a symbol.
Thanks to the high-quality engraving, the QR code on the gravestone remains permanently legible even in all weather conditions.
You can also add a customised engraved inscription under the QR code free of charge.
A gravestone with a QR code is more than just a symbol of farewell - it is a place of remembrance that makes it possible to remember a loved one in silent remembrance.
With a QR code on the gravestone, saying goodbye becomes a dignified remembrance,
that allows family and friends to commemorate the deceased
and preserve their memory of the deceased in a special way.
With a QR code for the headstone, pictures, videos, music, stories and beautiful eulogies can be added to a digital memorial page that allows the bereaved to share their thoughts and feelings.
QR codes on gravestones offer the opportunity to
to preserve the memory and show sympathy in a new way.
The result is a gravestone that not only shows a name and two dates, but reflects an entire life.
Our ideas for commemorating the deceased go beyond the traditional design of a cemetery headstone.
In this way, the QR code headstone remains not only as a symbol of the memory of the deceased, but as a living place,
that remains accessible to the bereaved.
The digital book of condolences allows relatives to express their condolences and remember their loved ones.
With every order you will receive the QR code from us for your memorial page as an image file.
You can easily use this as a print template for your obituaries,
Use obituaries or thank you notes.
Especially by incorporating the grave location on the memorial page, you give people,
who could not be present at the funeral in person, the opportunity
to say goodbye personally at the grave of the deceased at a later date -
a nice idea to commemorate the deceased, which also serves as a memorial of one
nice time.